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Merkel pledges economic cooperation with India

German Chancellor Angela Merkel has arrived in India on a three-day visit that will focus on trade and investment. The resumption of a stalled India-EU free trade agreement is likely to be one point of discussion.

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Red tape out, cooperation and profits in

Trade tops Merkel's India agenda

Merkel, who received a welcome with military honors on her arrival at the presidential palace in the Indian capital, New Delhi, opened her visit by saying that Germany wanted to support India's economic development in a number of fields.

"The prime minister has a very ambitious economic development program for India and Germany intends to contribute to it and support it," Merkel said, mentioning agriculture, economy, defense and internal security as some of the areas in which the two countries could cooperate.

The chancellor and Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi have now met for talks in the third round of inter-governmental consultations.

. India was the partner country at this year's CEBIT technology trade fair in Hanover.

Major trading partner

Merkel is being accompanied by the German ministers of Foreign Affairs, Food and Agriculture, Education and Research, and Economic Cooperation and Development, who will all be meeting their Indian counterparts.

Germany is already India's most important trading partner in Europe, though it ranks just 25th on the ladder of countries with which Germany has business ties.

On Tuesday, the German delegation will travel to the southern technology hub of Bangalore for talks with business leaders there.

Investment advice

In an interview with the Indian newspaper "Hindustan Times," German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier offered some advice for India if it wanted to boost foreign investment.

Although Steinmeier voiced praise for Modi, whom he said was steering the country in the right direction, Steinmeier urged India to improve its fiscal and tariff system in order to make investments easier, stressing that German businesses in India needed more legal security to function smoothly.

"A reliable legal and administrative framework is indispensable for German companies in India," he said

Foreign companies in India often feel hampered by levels of taxation, corruption and other obstacles to doing business.

Among other things, Steinmeier called for the introduction of a nationwide sales tax as "a big step forward."